Conserving Rosewood genetic resources for resilient livelihoods
in the Mekong
Project Inception workshop
Vientiane, Lao PDR, 10-14 September 2018
Contents
Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 1
Day 1 ....................................................................................................................................................... 2
Opening ceremony .............................................................................................................................. 2
Session 1: Regional assessment of conservation status of three Dalbergia species .......................... 3
Use of project results by national programmes and stakeholders ................................................. 4
Species occurrence data ................................................................................................................. 5
Baseline for in situ reserves and ex situ collections ........................................................................ 5
Session 2: Monitoring and evaluation ................................................................................................ 7
Day 2 ....................................................................................................................................................... 9
Session 3: Taking stock of past conservation and seed sourcing initiatives for planning detailed
data collection ..................................................................................................................................... 9
Strengths and weaknesses of past conservation initiatives ......................................................... 10
Market chains for Dalbergia seed and seedlings .......................................................................... 12
Session 4: Project management........................................................................................................ 14
Day 3 ..................................................................................................................................................... 14
Session 5: Work plan for socio-economic data collection ................................................................ 14
Session 6: Propagation research ....................................................................................................... 17
Session 7: Data management ........................................................................................................... 18
Session 8: Seed collections and provenance trials ........................................................................... 18
Seed collections ............................................................................................................................ 18
Provenance trials .......................................................................................................................... 18
Genetic studies.............................................................................................................................. 19
Day 4 ..................................................................................................................................................... 21
Field trip to Forest Science Research Center .................................................................................... 21
Day 5 ..................................................................................................................................................... 22
Stakeholder forum ............................................................................................................................ 22
Annex 1: Workshop Programme ........................................................................................................... 23
Annex 2: List of Participants.................................................................................................................. 28
Annex 3: Media coverage in Lao PDR ................................................................................................... 29
Annex 4: Workshop evaluation ............................................................................................................. 30
1
Introduction
This document reports the discussions and action points from the Inception workshop of the project
“Conserving Rosewood genetic resources for resilient livelihoods in the Mekong”. The workshop was
held in Vientiane, Lao PDR, from 10 to 14 September 2018. The project is funded by the UK Darwin
Initiative and runs from July 2018 to March 2021.
Working with forestry authorities and rural communities in Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand and
Vietnam, the project will use in situ and ex situ methods to safeguard the genetic resources of three
Dalbergia rosewood species of high conservation concern, namely Dalbergia cochinchinensis,
D. oliveri, and D. cultrata. The project will develop novel, and strengthen existing, capacity for seed
collection, seed source and nursery management, and associated value chain development. The
project will build the capacity of rural households to generate livelihood benefits from sustainable
use of these resources.
The project is implemented as a collaboration of the following organisations:
• Institute of Forest & Wildlife Research & Development, Cambodia
• Forest Science Research Center, National Agriculture & Forestry Research Institute, Lao PDR
• Forest Genetics & Conservation Department, Center for Biodiversity & Biosafety, Vietnam Academy of Agricultural Sciences
• Expert Office, Forest and Plant Conservation Research Office, Department of National Parks, Wildlife & Plant Conservation, Thailand
• Research Institute of Forestry, Chinese Academy of Forestry, China
• Department of Plant Sciences of University of Oxford (Project lead)
• Bioversity International (Project co-lead)
• University of Copenhagen, Denmark
The overall aim of the Inception workshop was to ensure the project makes a successful start, putting in place plans to fulfil its activities by the end of year 1. Specifically, the workshop had the following 5 objectives, with assignment and clarification of roles among partners:
• Discuss and agree plans to carry out activities to ensure project outputs
• Develop a detailed work plan for the first year of the project
• Developing trust and working relationship between partners
• Explore/clarify collaborations with other Dalbergia genetic resources projects and more broadly conservation/ management/ restoration projects and programmes in the countries, to link and contribute to other ongoing initiatives to ensure complementarity and mutual benefits
• Clarify accounting/reporting procedures and timelines according to Darwin requirements
Workshop programme is given in Annex 1 and list of participants in Annex 2.
Workshop presentations are available from: https://cgiar-
my.sharepoint.com/:f:/g/personal/r_jalonen_cgiar_org/EktH6rKE_O1DsRY9dQnztl0B4LH-
6H1jOM3mC_Z8Vsmn2w?e=cp9OlI
2
Day 1
Opening ceremony
The workshop was officially inaugurated by Dr Bounthong Bouahome, Director General of the
National Agriculture and Forestry Research Institute, and His Exellency Mr Hugh Evans, British
Ambassador to Lao PDR.
In his opening remarks, Dr Bounthong explained that the project contributes to the Lao PDR’s
National Strategy for 2025 that covers rural development and sustainable forest management, and
includes a target to increase forest cover to 70% by 2020. Conservation and sustainable use of forest
resources are both of crucial importance in Lao PDR. Knowledge of forest genetic resources and
conservation approaches is still limited in the country. A Tree Seed Project funded by the Danish
Government in 2002-2010 identified and established in total 100 tree seed sources for 29 species
across the country, of which 76 still remain. Dalbergia species are among the species for which seed
sources have disappeared, and it is not easy to find these species in nature anymore. Illegal logging
continues despite of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and
Flora (CITES). To help conserve Dalbergia species, it is important to work with markets and traders.
HE Hugh Evans explained that the project is of high priority for Lao government, given its obligations
for the CITES. Priorities for the diplomatic relations between the governments of UK and Lao PDR
include strengthening political ties, education and governance. Combating the Illegal wildlife trade
(IWT) that currently amounts to US$ 23 billion, is one of UK’s global priorities. One third of global
timber seizures are Rosewood. In 2018, the British Embassy in Lao PDR ran a competition for local
filmmakers to produce short films on IWT, and the entries will be showcased at the Luang Prabang
International Film Festival in December 2018 (speech available on project sharepoint).
Project Leader Dr David Boshier, Department of Plant Sciences (University of Oxford), explained how
the project was conceived through regional collaboration under the Asia Pacific Forest Genetic
Resources Programme (APFORGEN). The project is funded by the British Government, but it was
developed through a regional workshop that was sponsored by the Republic of Korea. Moreover, the
project has a sister project in China to conserve local Rosewood species, including some of which are
shared with the Mekong countries, with funding from the National Science Foundation of China. The
project team hopes to attract further additional funds to help expand the project and its impacts.
Figure 1. Workshop participants with dignitaries at the opening ceremony
3
Session 1: Regional assessment of conservation status of three Dalbergia species
David Boshier presented the workshop objectives, after which participants introduced themselves.
David Boshier gave an introduction to the 1st session on regional assessment of the conservation
status of the project’s target species. In thinking about the need for regional assessment of
conservation status he noted the importance of detailed information for individual tree species for
more confident decision making in use and conservation. He presented the activities for this output
in the proposal. He then asked people to think about: what information needs are; identify how each
country may use database/results; which specific national plans/strategies do results apply to and
how; what groups will be interested in the results; what should results/outputs look like to address
these plans/strategies and suit the interests of different user groups?
Hannes Gaisberger, Bioversity International, presented recent approaches and applications of spatial
analysis for the conservation of forest genetic resources. Spatial approaches help, for example,
identify areas of highest diversity and highest threats, gaps in existing germplasm collections, and
species suitability to growth sites. In species distribution modelling (also known as ecological niche
modelling), environmental predictors are used to predict the species’ potential and actual
distributions. While the number of scientific papers published on species distribution modelling keep
increasing, its application for practical conservation decisions is still limited. Species distribution
modelling has been used for example to assess the conservation status of crop wild relatives in
South African countries, comparing diversity hotspots with climate change predictions and analysing
eco-geographic diversity so as to identify potentially distinct populations. A proposed network of in
situ conservation areas was proposed as a result of the project, focusing on complementarity with
existing conservation sites. In another project in Burkina Faso, modelled distributions were
compared with estimated intensity of threats, and conservation priorities and approaches (in situ, ex
situ or assisted natural regeneration) were proposed based on each context. Available resources
online include the Crop Wild Relatives Portal (http://www.cropwildrelatives.org/sadc-cwr-project/)
and online atlas of MAPFORGEN which includes basic information on species reproductive biology,
seed dispersal and uses (http://www.mapforgen.org/).
Riina Jalonen, Bioversity International, explained the process for the spatial conservation assessment
for the project’s target species. Distribution modelling and basic threat analysis will be conducted
through a related project ‘APFROGIS – Establishing an Information System for conserving native tree
species and their genetic resources in Asia-Pacific” (www.apforgen.org/activities/apforgis) that is
conducting distribution modelling for another approximately 50 native Asian tree species using the
same methodology. Darwin project partners will collect and provide information on the target
species’ natural distribution (current or historical), and additional information is also compiled
through the APFORGIS project. APFORGIS team then performs state-of-the-art species distribution
modelling SDM and basic status assessment, including predicted potential, current and future
distribution, and seed zones identified based on eco-geographic variation across the species’ range
(including also other countries than those involved in this project). Results are fed back to this
project for more detailed analyses and conservation planning.
4
Use of project results by national programmes and stakeholders
Participants discussed in groups how their countries may use the knowledge and results generated
by the projects, and which national strategies and policies they help to implement. They highlighted,
among other things, the following:
Vietnam: National policies currently strongly emphasize mainstreaming biodiversity conservation
and sustainable use with other land uses. This involves understanding land use changes and the
threats and opportunities they present to bidodiversity, and preparing land use plans. However,
there is lack of spatial data on land uses for implementing the National Biodiversity Strategy and
Action Plan in Vietnam. Species distribution and threat maps by the project will importantly
contribute to this process
Lao PDR: There is lack of centralised databases on species conservation. Partners vision strategy and
action plan for Dalbergia conservation as an output from the project.
Cambodia: National Forest Programme has indicators and targets for areas under in situ and ex situ
conservation, hectares under tree planting, and priority species for planting and conservation.
Distribution maps for Dalbergia species, including information e.g. on rainfall and soil types, will be
important for planning planting programmes
Thailand: The long-term national strategy for biodiversity conservation includes mapping of rare,
endangered and threatened tree species for conservation, and the project directly contributes to
that by generating and compiling relevant information. Poaching is a serious problem, and
knowledge on distributions can help strengthen law enforcement in areas where the species are
known to occur. Sensitivity of information is important; rangers need specific location data, but it
should not be spread. Occurrence data can be shared publicly at the level of province of occurrence.
China: The country has a national implementation plan for the Global Plan of Action on Forest
Genetic Resources (FAO 2014). There is a national biodiversity database with 130,000 occurrence
records. Access is open but not all information, especially location data, is freely available. The data
is being used for developing 5-year national plans for forest genetic resources. Distribution maps do
not yet exist and would be nice to have as next step. The project can contribute to better planting
material and species-site matching, support seed collection and gene exploration.
The following stakeholders were mentioned across the countries as potential users of information
from the project:
• Ministries of Environment, Agriculture and Rural Development, for guiding the development
and implementation of policies, strategies and regulations
• Universities, for use in education and training
• Rural communities, to guide forest management and tree planting programmes
• Non-governmental organisations working on biodiversity conservation
• Private companies and nursery managersfor guiding seed sourcing and establishment of
plantations
• Tree breeders and associated industries, for the development of new varieties (especially in
China)
• Researchers studying conservation and management of Dalbergia species
5
Figure 2. Dr Suchitra and Dr Voradol (Department of National Parks, Wildlife & Plant Conservation, Thailand) engaged in group discussions
Action points:
• Identify specific strategies and actions for engaging with key of stakeholders in each country,
and helping them understand information and tools.
• Carefully consider formats in which data would be made available, and needs for data
harmonisation, to facilitate use and integration of project results in national programmes
and strategies. Data formats often differ even between institutions in one country, which
makes comparisons difficult.
Species occurrence data
Country partners identified available occurrence data for the project’s target species from forest
inventories, research agencies and their own field research. Only already available data is needed;
the results of the modelling can then help plan and prioritise future field studies.
Action points:
• Country partners will submit available occurrence data to Bioversity by 8 October 2018, for
developing distribution models.
Baseline for in situ reserves and ex situ collections
Project targets include increasing the number of designated in situ reserves and ex situ collections
for Dalbergia species by 50% (indicator 0.1). During project development, country partners had
6
reported that there would currently be 12 in situ and 17 ex situ conservation units for the tree
species across the project countries (Table 1).
Possible new conservation sites include:
• Cambodia: at least 10 populations are known from community forests; to be inventoried
• Lao PDR: Dalbergia oliveri is known to occur in Upper Central and Southern Lao, but more
information on locations is needed. Dalbergia cochinchinensis has been identified in national
forest protection area in Vientiane province. Tentative information on potential in situ
conservation areas exists. D. cochinchinensis and D. cultrata have also been found in recent
inventories of rattan species, and are known to occur in lower central region.
• Thailand: 12 populations have been assessed and highly diverse populations have been
identified. Target would be to identify 3 populations for conservation each in North, Central
and Southern Thailand. All National parks in Thailand are expected to have some data on
species occurrences (perhaps apart from Dalbergia oliveri). Populations could be used for
seed collection including for restoration purposes.
• Vietnam: existing in situ sites are in three different National Parks. One ex situ collection is
found in a community forest area. More information is needed on distributions of Dalbergia
cultrata.
• China: information on 50 locations of Dalbergia cultrata has been collected. The species is
recognised as important species and has been researched for silviculture.
Discussion: Good practices and challenges for identifying and establishing new conservation units:
• Common problems in assessing the conservation status of the target species include lack of
data of the existing conservation units, changing conservation status of the units (e.g. due to
illegal logging), and difficulty of sharing information between multiple organisations working
on the topic
• Definitions of in situ and ex situ conservation units vary between the countries. For example,
while Thailand has many ex situ conservation units, there are currently no designated in situ
conservation units for Dalbergia species. Wild populations of the species are conserved only
as part of the Protected Areas system.
• For assessing the achievement of the indicator by the end of the project, it is important to
confirm the current status of the pre-existing reserves and collections. Some reserves or
collections may not exist anymore in the field. Sustainability of the reserves to be
established through the project is very important.
• Conservation sites should ideally be as large as possible (at least approximately 50 trees).
However, it must also be considered what is available and how feasible conservation is in
the landscape context. Areas with high potential for conservation (e.g. well managed
community forests) are better than areas with higher diversity coupled with high
vulnerability to threats.
• Data about reserves and collections is held by different organisations, and time is needed to
compile it. Accessing information held by some parties may be difficult.
• Chinese partners prefer to publish data in scientific literature before sharing it. After
publishing, data sharing is easy.
7
Table 1. Existing in situ and ex situ conservation units for three Dalbergia species in the project
countries.
Species
Cambodia Lao PDR Thailand Vietnam TOTAL
Dalbergia
cochinchinensis
In situ 2 0 0* 3 5
Ex situ 0 ? 13 2 15
Dalbergia
oliveri
In situ 2 0 0 4 6
Ex situ 0 ? 0 1 1
Dalbergia
cultrata
In situ 1 0 0 0 1
Ex situ 0 ? 0 0 0
* Only in protected areas
Action points:
It was agreed that the project partners provide the following information for verifying the baseline
by 31 December 2018:
In situ reserves:
• Location of site
• Forest type
• Number of trees
• Diameter range
• Size of the site (ha)
• Map (showing delineation)
Ex situ collections:
• Location of site AND origin
• Forest type of site AND origin
• Number of mother trees
• Age of the site
• Size of the site (ha)
• Map (showing delineation)
Session 2: Monitoring and evaluation
Riina Jalonen presented Monitoring and evaluation plan for the project. The project has three types
of targets:
• Proportional change targets compared to current situation (baseline required to measure
progress) (Table 2)
• Numerical targets, e.g. number of people trained through project (Table 3)
• Qualitative change targets, e.g. availability of maps or recommendations
A monitoring and evaluation plan is being prepared that details the information needs and
responsibilities for monitoring project progress. Next steps for monitoring and evaluation include:
• Finalise monitoring and evaluation plan (specify responsibilities, reporting lines etc)
• Establish M&E Advisory Group: one representative per organisation, not directly involved in
project
• Prepare detailed work plans to assist in monitoring
• Plan for data collection for the baseline
8
Figure 3. Why is monitoring and evaluation needed? Participants’ thoughts.
Table 2. Project targets requiring baseline.
Indicator Target Countries Data source
0.1 number of designated in situ/ex situ Dalbergia conservation units
50% increase Cambodia, Lao PDR Thailand, Vietnam
Official documents and records
0.2 forest-related income of 175 rural households in 3 countries
20% increase Cambodia, Lao PDR, Vietnam
Household survey (Q2, Q13); National records?
0.3 Number of households planting Dalbergia on their farmland in 4 communities
30% increase Lao PDR, Vietnam Household survey (Q2, Q13)
9
Table 3. Numerical targets of the project
Indicator Target Countries
0.3 (2.2, 3.3. 3.4)
100 professionals and 175 rural households trained All
2.1 At least 25 new in situ/ex situ conservation units All
2.3 15 new coordinated seed collections All
2.4 Regional/national provenance trials with 8 provenances and 4 sites
All
3.2 Seed sourcing in 3 public and 3 private sector tree planting programmes reviewed
Cambodia, Lao PDR
3.5 175 households in 7 communities involved in seed collection businesses
Cambodia, Lao, Viet Nam
3.5 4 community nurseries, capacity 10,000 seedlings per year from year 3 onwards
Cambodia, Lao, Viet Nam
Day 2
Session 3: Taking stock of past conservation and seed sourcing initiatives for planning
detailed data collection
Riina Jalonen introduced the objectives for Day 2:
• Gather ideas and experiences on strengths and weaknesses of past conservation initiatives
and seed supply systems
• Identify sources of information for a detailed data collection
• Generate inputs for work plan for activities 1.7 (conservation), 3.4 (current seed sourcing by
public/private sector) and 3.5 (barriers to community involvement)
To identify conservation priorities and opportunities for community engagement in seed production,
many types of information are needed about the current situation:
• Strengths of past initiatives / conservation priorities (activity 1.7)
• Current practices for seed and seedling sourcing in ≥3 state-owned and ≥3 private sector
nurseries (3.4)
• Staff’s knowledge of seed quality and genetic diversity (3.4)
• Staff’s knowledge and attitudes to community-based seed supply (3.4)
• Communities’ current seed collection practices (3.5)
• Seed exchange networks and market linkages (3.5)
• Tree planting (3.5)
• Community institutions and capacities (3.5)
• Traditional knowledge (3.5)
• Income from seed and seedling sales (3.5)
This information will be collected through household and village surveys, key informant interviews,
participatory methods, review of literature/ and reports, and observation, mainly during Q3 and Q4
of Year 1.
10
Strengths and weaknesses of past conservation initiatives
Participants discussed the strengths and weaknesses of past conservation initiatives using a SWOT
matrix (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats). Participants were divided into three groups
for the exercise, focusing on perspectives of different stakeholders: forest authorities, local
community members, and conservation biologists or geneticists (Tables 3-5). After developing the
SWOT matrices, participants were asked to identify informants with good knowledge of the issues
they had highlighted, for conducting interviews.
Table 3. SWOT analysis of past and current species conservation initiatives from the perspective of
forest authorities
Strengths Weaknesses
• Forestry Law in place
• Forest Strategy and action plans in place
• Lack of capacity (manpower, budget)
• Only focus on short term economic gains
• Limited support by governmental and/or non-governmental organisations (often focusing on social issues only)
Opportunities
Threats
• Awareness rising
• Corporate social responsibility projects, for example for establishing community nurseries (Thailand, Cambodia)
• International Cooperation and knowledge sharing
• high demand of Dalbergia spp.
• Political involvement in (illegal) timber trade
Figure 4. Dr So Thea (Institute of Forest & Wildlife Research & Development, Cambodia), presenting his group’s results of the SWOT analysis
11
Table 4. SWOT analysis of past and current species conservation initiatives from the perspective of
local community members
Strengths Weaknesses
• Good organisation and structure for community-based forest management
• Decision-making power
• Proximity to forests (location, neighbourhood, etc.)
• More human resources
• Income from seed/seedlings and forest products
• Involvement of the monks (religious community setting examples; Cambodia)
• NGO’s provide technical support in seed storage (Vietnam)
• National parks maintain an online directory of nodal farmers who supply seed (Vietnam)
• Difficulty in communication between communities & government (sometimes)
• Sustainable use of resources
• Lack of technical & professional knowledge
• Lack of involvement (gender and age difference), e.g. men hunting in forests
• Lack of monitoring management
• No clear land boundaries; difficulty in maintaining conservation sites
Opportunities
Threats
• Government policies / regulations
• Financial support from the government
• Teaching and guidance programmes (e.g. seed storage, cultivation techniques)
• Monitoring and educations
• Research on landscape and soil improvement
• Government provides 5% subsidy for planting Dalbergia or other trees, for climate change mitigation (Thailand)
• Over-exploitation of forest resources
• Encroachment of the community forests
• Land conversion
• Land development plans may differ at provincial vs national levels
Discussion: Opportunities and threats for strengthening conservation initiatives
• CITES agreement is both an opportunity and threat for Dalbergia: it encourages planting of
the species, but obtaining permissions to harvest and sell timber later may still be difficult, if
planted origin cannot be confirmed.
• In Thailand, timber sales of Dalbergia and teak from planted stands are taxed at 40%.
Legislation should be changed to incentivize planting. There is a network of communities
who are successfully planting Eucalyptus and Paraserianthes falcataria for income, and the
model could possibly be extended to Dalbergia species as well. Companies provide improved
planting material. Communities may sell timber to any company, not necessarily to the one
which provided material.
• China has similar joint forest management models by communities and government
organisations. Government provides high quality seed sources, farmers own the land, and
ownership of trees is shared. Several communities may get together and propose joint
planting programmes to the government. Government also provides subsidies for private
sector to partner with communities in tree planting. Planted species include Dalbergia and
other high value tree species. Communities sell seed online.
• Listing of all Dalbergia species under CITES II has promoted planting of Dalbergia latifolia in
Indonesia. The price of the timber has increased, but harvesting and sales are not a problem
since the species is exotic in the country.
• Selling seed from planted trees is probably easier than selling timber, and provides much
quicker returns
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Table 5. SWOT analysis of past and current species conservation initiatives from the perspective of
conservation biologists / geneticists.
Strengths Weaknesses
• Policies, measures, regulations, laws in place
• Potential populations for conservation identified
• Conservation areas (PA) strictly protected by law
• Number of initiatives on conservation in place
• Genetic diversity of some Dalbergia spp. have been assessed
• Based on genetic diversity evaluation, some potential populations have been identified for ex situ / in situ conservation
• Awareness of importance of Dalbergia spp. recognized / concerned
• Law enforcement not effective implemented due to illegal logging
• Some countries are facing of lack of good seed sources for ex situ conservation / restoration
• Genetic erosion / potential of inbreeding depression because of fragmentation
• Genetic studies are costly and time consuming
• Lack of knowledge on seed collection and registration increases risk of inbred material
Opportunities
Threats
• DNA markers to trace origin / individuals
• Simple guidance for proper seed collection for ex situ conservation / restoration
• Awareness on conservation raising
• Vegetative propagation is alternative for genetic materials for ex situ / restoration? But genetic diversity of clones needs to be ascertained
• New technologies: GPS chips in wood to trace illegal logging; colour-marking trees to distinguish origin (technology developed in USA)
• To ensure that genetic diversity is not decreased and inbreeding depression is avoided, in order to obtain good seed yield
• Local seed sources must be collected and registered / planted for good adaptation – need simple guidance for practitioners
• Seed availability is uncertain
Market chains for Dalbergia seed and seedlings
Participants drew in groups current market chain maps for seed and seedlings, to help assess
diversity of existing chains and new market opportunities. These included:
• In Cambodia, seed sources are in natural forests or community forests. Local communities
are provided training in seed collection. Seed is sold partly to middlemen. Government
obtains 70-80% of seed or seedlings from own nurseries. Private sector companies have
their own nurseries. Seed certification does not exist. Forestry Administration is working to
first connect communities to seed markets, to foster use of natural seed sources. Further
improving collection practices and genetic quality would then be the next step.
• In Lao PDR, farmers collect Dalbergia fruit and sell to Forestry Department, which then tests,
certifies and packages seed. Genetic quality of seed or collection practices are not known.
Planting areas include barren lands and degraded areas (planting by government), as well as
in some cases agroforestry and integrated land management systems
• In Vietnam, villagers obtain seed from relatives and neighbours, and plant on their farmland.
Seed may be mixture of Dalbergia species. Certified seed carries a premium price in
Vietnam.
13
Figure 5. Market chain map for Dalbergia seed and seedlings in Lao PDR.
After drawing the market chain maps, participants identified existing barriers to communities’
involvement in seed collection and production. These included (depending on country context):
• Lack of ownership of, or access rights to, seed sources
• Prices are dictated by Forestry Administration
• Lack of interest and support from government organisations to develop seed supply
• Issues of trust and communication challenges between actors.
• Only selected species are bought and not necessarily every year
• Short term contracts, sometimes at very short notice
• Small amount of seedlings required by non-governmental buyers such as private sector and
NGOs
• Low prices; commissions by middlemen
• Lack of market knowledge allows middlemen to cheat sellers (offering lower prices and
claiming that seed quality is poor)
• Difficulty of maintaining community involvement beyond the duration of individual projects
• Poor and varying seed availability
• Lack of tools for seed collection results in unsustainable collection practices such as cutting
branches (Lao PDR)
• Lack of standardised methods for seed storage
• Lack of seed quality testing and certification to raise interest of potential seed buyers.
• Lack of understanding of the importance of seed quality among buyers
• People fail to see the long-term benefits from planting trees
14
Session 4: Project management
David Boshier presented reporting requirements for the project. Brief half-yearly reports must be
submitted by 31 October annually. Annual reports are due 30 April and must detail progress against
planned activities, outputs and outcomes. Indicators from the logical framework matrix, and
evidence of progress and changes in the field (secondary data, quotes, figures) should be used to
demonstrate project status, and help to reduce long narratives. Reports are sent for expert review
and rated for progress. Reports are shared publicly on the internet. Up to 10% movement of funds
between budget lines is allowed. Carrying forward funds to the following year must be avoided, but
if it is necessary, request must be made by the end of January annually. Approval is not guaranteed.
Action points:
• Highlight ongoing coordination and synergising with other related projects and initiatives for
the first half-year report (31 October 2018),
• Plan now for the activities that must be reported on in the annual report (30 April 2019), so
as to have the adequate information and evidence for reporting
Day 3
Session 5: Work plan for socio-economic data collection
Objectives of the session were to develop timeline and work plan for data collection for activities 1.7
(conservation), 3.4 (current seed sourcing by public/private sector) and 3.5 (barriers to community
involvement), and to identify available human resources and needs.
Country partners were asked to:
• Review the list of tasks, time and team needs, and add information about available
resources and skills at their organisation/unit
• Add comments to the work plan (timeline) where relevant
The following timelines were identified as suitable for data collection in communities, regarding local
agricultural seasons and festivals:
• Cambodia and Lao PDR: December to March
• Vietnam: December and March (January and February unsuitable as community members
are busy with other activities)
Dalbergia species fruit from October to December, so this timing is well suited for asking about seed
collection activities and related incomes in household surveys and focus group discussions.
15
Figure 6. Mr Chaloun, Mr Vongvilay and Mr Bansa (Forest Research Centre, Lao) planning field data
collection.
The following considerations and tips for data collection were identified by participants:
• In most cases, partners already have good relationships with project communities, and also
experience in data collection. Support is needed in designing questionnaires and interview
guides as well as in data management
• It is important that questionnaires are understandable, not academic style.
• Sample size for household surveys should be reduced to be more feasible (20 households)
• Local translators from communities are needed because of local dialects (Lao PDR and
Vietnam). Identifying and hiring local coordinators from the communities is also very helpful
• Need to provide tokens for research participants, equivalent to a day’s wage
• Examples of costs:
o Transportation to field (horse, motorbike, porters): daily wage, 10-15 USD / person
(Vietnam)
o Local translators and local coordinators: daily wage, 10-15 USD / person (Vietnam)
o Token for research participants: up to 8-10 USD (Cambodia)
16
Table 6. Draft data collection plan, with forestry professionals and experts as informants
Method Task Team needed
Time needed
Skills needed
Interview (professionals, semi-professionals)
interview 5-6 people per country on strengths and weaknesses of past conservation initiatives
2 people
3-4 days Good knowledge about general conservation issues; ability to identify follow-up questions based on interview and observation; good note taking
Interview (professionals, semi-professionals)
Interview 5-6 people per nursery / programme on current seed sourcing practices and capacities. Visit facilities for observation (Cambodia and Lao only)
2 people
2 days per programme (3 prog. per country)
Good knowledge about seed supply chains; ability to identify follow-up questions based on interview and observation
Community meeting and Free and Prior Informed Consent
Organise community meeting, explain the purpose of the project, ask interest to participate, answer questions
2-3 people
1 day per community
Good understanding of the project, ability to create trust
Household survey
interview male and female household heads in 40 households per community; data entry to computer
2-3 people (men and women)
8-10 days per community
Find respondents and ask questions according to survey; ideally interview skills
Interview (community members and local stakeholders)
interview 20 people in each community/area about good practices and challenges in conservation, seed collection, marketing and collaboration among community members
2-3 people (men and women)
8-10 days per community
Good knowledge about local issues; ability to identify follow-up questions based on interview and observation; good notetaking
Participatory methods
Organise and facilitate 6-8 group discussions using participatory tools (by gender groups)
2-4 people (men and women)
3-4 days per community
Good group facilitation skills, good understanding of local issues, ability to identify follow up questions; good notetaking
Observation (communities)
Visit seed collection sites, planting sites, nurseries to observe practices
2-3 people (men and women)
2-3 days per community
Good understanding of local issues, ability to identify follow up questions
17
Table 7. Draft work plan for data collection presented at the workshop
Month Activity Who
Sept • Work planning, back ground information • Literature review • Develop data collection instruments (1st draft)
All Bioversity Bioversity
Oct • Develop data collection instruments • Identify sample • Identify enumerators + facilitators • Develop detailed budget for fieldwork
All All Partners, Biov Partners, Biov
Nov Translate questionnaires Train teams
Partners Bioversity
Dec Train teams Data collection + entry
Bioversity Partners
Jan Data collection + entry Partners
Feb Data collection + entry Data analysis (preliminary)
Partners Bioversity
Mar Data analysis and interpretation All
Session 6: Propagation research
Dr So Thea, Deputy Director, Institute of Forest and Wildlife Research and Development of
Cambodia, presented about recent research on vegetative propagation of Dalbergia in his country.
According to a literature review, Dalbergia sissoo, D. congestiflora, and D. retusa have been studied
for vegetative propagation with good success. Dalbergia cochinchinensis is the most important
species for seedling production in Cambodia: 1,100,000 seedlings were produced in 2015. An initial
experiment was conducted in 2015 at IRD’s research nursery to test vegetative propagation of the
species. After 30 days, 64% of D. cochinchinensis cuttings had developed roots, and survival rate was
66%. Under the current project, vegetative propagation will be tested at two sites: a community
nursery, and a research centre. Growth conditions (controlled vs community nursery conditions) and
industrial and home-made rooting hormones (NAA and aspirin) will be compared. Training will be
provided to community members for conducting the experiment.
Discussion
• Number of clones used for vegetative propagation is important. Awareness raising on this
should be included in the training.
• Vegetatively propagated seedlings do not develop tap roots, which may lead to slower
growth and windfall on moist soils. However, Dalbergia spp generally don’t develop tap
roots from seedlings anyway. Good matching species to sites is important for root
development.
• Production costs needs to be monitored to ensure economic viability
18
Session 7: Data management
David Boshier introduced the session by considering the different types of data that might be
collected under the varied activities during the project, issues of continuity, updating and access to
data. Participants then worked through these issues in country groups on worksheets identifying
those that were of relevance to their institute and work programme.
Session 8: Seed collections and provenance trials
Seed collections
Participants discussed priorities for seed collections, based on available data on species occurrences
through the APFORGIS project, and studies on the species’ genetic structure (e.g. Hartvig et al.
2017). A spreadsheet was circulated for compiling lists of a) published molecular studies of any of
the target species and b) past or existing provenance or progeny trials of the target species. Indicator
2.3 requires at least 15 new, coordinated seed collections. Maps of predicted species distributions
based on distribution modelling will be available in January 2019, and can be compared with existing
collections to identify gaps. However, Dalbergia cochinchinensis and Dalbergia oliveri are fruiting in
October-November, and November-December, respectively, and it would be possible to already
collect some seed before the distribution maps are ready. Participants indicated their tentative
priorities on maps.
Discussion:
• Criteria for prioritising collections are needed and should include level of threat to the
populations, existing collections, seed zones and known planned collection missions.
• Dalbergia cochinchinensis is not a high elevation species, nor likely in the Mekong delta.
Occurrence data for the species in the northern part of the sub-region and in the South on
Mekong delta may be incorrect.
• The occurrence of D. cultrata in southern China (Yunan – Chinese Atlas of Woody Plants) was
discussed with respect to its apparent absence from the north of Vietnam
Provenance trials
Country partners discussed the benefits and possibilities of establishing a regional provenance trial
on Dalbergia cochinchinensis rather than trials within each country that just establish provenance
from within that country. The following points were made:
• In Vietnam National Biodiversity Law allows seed exchange.
• In Cambodia, more information is needed on the specific regulations for seed exchange, but
it may be possible. Seed has been previously shared with other countries for research
purposes.
• According to Lao participants, a clear Memorandum of Understanding is important and if in
place, seed exchange is possible. Without that it is difficult.
• Thailand has previously shared seed with Millenium Seed Bank and Kew Botanical Gardens.
Experiences show that developing a MOU takes approximately one year. After that,
19
necessary documents can be obtained from CITES. Once the formalities are in place, seed
exchange is not a problem.
• MOU should be developed for at least 5 years, so that future projects and collaborations can
benefit from it. British embassies could facilitate seed exchange given previous
collaborations with British agencies.
• Concerns about local adaptation were expressed. Scale of local adaptation is not well
understood. Research has mainly been done on temperate trees, and results are not directly
applicable to tropical species. Many provenance trials in the tropics are of exotic species, or
when native species are used, there is often no ‘local provenance established.’ Regional
provenance trial will help understand the scale of local adaptation.
In conclusion, participants agreed that it is worth trying for a regional provenance trial. Project span
is long enough to develop the MOU and meet other formalities.
Table 8. Existing provenance/progeny trials of Dalbergia species in the region
Species Country No. provs.
No. families
No. sites
Provenance coverage
Site location (approx)
Planted Status Source
D. cochinchinensis
Thailand 7 85 1 East Thailand
Khao-Yai Field Station
1988 ? Soonhuae 1994
D. cochinchinensis
Vietnam 2 100 1 Chumomray NP & buffer zone
2003
Good growth & survival
Tran Ti Hoa
D. oliveri Vietnam 2 100 1 Cat Tien NP 2003 Tran Ti Hoa
D. cochinchinensis
Cambodia 4(7) 100 2 4 provinces in Cambodia
Siem Reap province
2016
Good growth & survival
So Thea
Genetic studies
A sub-group of participants discussed genetic research questions for the project. Group participants
were David Boshier, Suchitra Changtragoon, Zheng Yongqi, Tin Hang Hung (Henry), Ida Hartvig and
John MacKay (via skype). The following topics were identified:
• Genetic bottlenecks in community nurseries and seed collections that affect seed
germination, seedling survival and growth
• Impact of fragmentation on outcrossing (evidence of negative impacts exists for Dalbergia
cochinchinensis) that reduces seed production and seed viability
• Adaptive variation among Dalbergia populations
Country partners collectively identified the first topic as a priority for them. The other topics can be
explored via collaboration with other research teams and matching funding opportunities.
20
Figure 7. Possible areas for additional seed collections during the project, prioritised by participants
by country.
Plenary discussion:
• Genetic bottlenecks should be studied also in commercial nurseries. An important selling
point in improving community participation in seedling production is that community
members would be able to produce high-quality seedlings of comparable or better quality
than that currently found in commercial nurseries.
• Can compare genetic bottlenecks before and after the project, to show impact.
Forest Research Center in Lao PDR test germination of seed purchased from communities,
and seed collected by project communities can be compared with other communities who
would not have received training in collection.
• To study adaptive variation, thousands of genes would need to be looked at. John MacKay
and Henry are narrowing down the species to D. cochinchinensis and D. oliveri to do this.
• The project team has received an offer from Alex Widmer, ETH Zurich, to finance sequencing
samples of Dalbergia at his laboratory to assist in species identification. However, molecular
markers and DNA barcodes already exist for the project’s target species, and identification is
easy. Focus is now on intra-specific variation and identification of population origin.
Developing new markers can assist in conducting such studies.
Figure 8. His Excellency Hugh Evans, British Ambassador to Lao PDR, hosted a dinner for workshop participants on 12 September. Mr Evans and guests discussed similarities between illegal Rosewood trade and illegal animal trade within IWT, a priority for the British Government. Curbing these forms of illegal trade requires similar capacities, forensic methods, and regional collaboration. Discussions also covered training possibilities under the Chevening Scholarships programme.
21
Day 4
Field trip to Forest Science Research Center
Forest Research Center is situated 49 km North of Vientiane. Participants were welcomed by the
Director General of FRC, Mr Vongvilay, who gave a brief introduction to the Center and its research
areas. The FRC has a collection of 2200 plant species in its herbarium, and it maintains 5 seed
sources with a total 347 mother trees over an area of 14 ha. This includes 33 mother trees of
Dalbergia spp., and other valuable timber species such as Pterocarpus spp., Alstonia scholaris and
Xylia xylocarpa. The FRC sells 100,000 seedlings of non-timber forest species every year. The FRC
collaborates closely with the Department of Forestry and the Provincial Agriculture and Forestry
Offices, each of which has their own forestry section.
22
All participants were invited to plant a seedling of Dalbergia cochinchinensis to commemorate the
visit. Thereafter, participants visited FRC’s nursery, herbarium, seed storage and qualification testing
facilities, and two Dalbergia cochinchinensis seed sources established in 1980s. One of the sources
had been destroyed by illegal logging, illustrating the severe pressure on the species. Participants
measured dbh of some trees of the plot planted in 1981.
Day 5
Stakeholder forum
On the last day of the workshop, national, regional and international organisations based in Lao PDR were invited to a stakeholder forum to hear about the project’s objectives and planned activities in the country, and to identify potential synergies and collaboration opportunities with the project. List of participants is provided in Annex 3.
Mr Bansa Thammavong, Deputy Director of Forest Science Research Center, welcomed participants
and explained about the project’s objectives and activities in Lao PDR. David Boshier and Riina
Jalonen presented the project’s approaches and targets related to the regional species conservation
assessment and fostering participation of local communities in tree seed supply.
Topics of the ensuing discussion included:
• Biodiversity surveys conducted in several provinces can provide information on species
distributions for distribution modelling
• Difficulty of identifying species in the field and matching local and scientific names.
• Previous experiences show that there is a delicate balance between market supply and
demand for planting material of high value species. There are examples where market prices
have collapsed after a successful start, due to market saturation.
• Regulations on plantation establishment and timber harvests are currently a disincentive for
tree planting. Governments are in the position to change these. In Lao PDR, a new forestry
law is being drafted, and changes to royalties and taxation are possible.
• The Centre for people and Forests (RECOFCT) has several community forestry projects in
Lao, including a new project ‘FLOURISH’ funded by the Government of Germany and the
International Climate Initiative
Dr Chansamone Phongoudoume, Deputy Director of NAFRI, offered closing remarks and
encouraged the project partners to collaborate closely together. He highlighted the importance of
research in guiding policy formulation. He also pointed out that sharing materials for DNA analyses
between the four partner countries would be feasible, as long as the analyses would be done in one
of the participating countries. Lastly, he encouraged the project team to reach out to national
stakeholders and interest groups, including private sector, non-governmental organisations and
previous projects funded by the UK Darwin Initiative.
23
Annex 1: Workshop Programme
Programme for Inception workshop
Vientiane Capital, Lao PDR 10-14th September, 2018
Date/time Activity Objectives Venue Who
Sun. 9 Sept Arrival of participants - transfer to Vansana Riverside Hotel Vansana
Riverside Hotel All
Mon.10 Sept Opening and Output 1: Regional assessment of conservation status of D. cochinchinensis, D. oliveri, D. cultrate
Hotel meeting room
10:00-10:45 Official opening project/workshop. Short formal inauguration (speeches by DG of NAFRI, British Ambassador to Lao PDR)
“ All
10:45-11:30 Coffee break/photos Interact “ All
11:30-11:45 Outline workshop objectives, process and expected outputs “ David
11:45-12:30
i) Why/how to develop regional assessment of conservation status, what information needs? ii) Conservation assessments /opportunities from other countries iii) APFORGIS - Database structure
Presentations “ David Hannes Riina
12:30-13:00 Using the Dalbergia Regional Conservation status database/mapping results – group discussion
identify how countries may use results (e.g. integrate into specific national plans/strategies)
All-group
13:00-14:00 Lunch Refuel and refresh “ All
13:30-15:00 Georeferenced data collection - species occurrence, seed zones, forest cover, genetic diversity, climate predictions, existing in situ reserves & ex situ collections
Identify existing sources (baseline data), gaps (include use of/need for genetic data). Agree database structure Develop strategy for data collection
“
All
15:00-15:45 Report back and agree responsibilities/work to achieve activities 1.2-1.6
Develop detailed work plan “ All
15:45-16:15 Break Refresh - interact “ All
24
16:15-17:00 Project Monitoring and Evaluation – presentation and discussion of proposal
Agree a plan that will facilitate M&E requirements from donor
“ Riina All
17:00 Finish
Welcome Dinner Refuel-interact-enjoy To be decided All
Tue. 11 Sept Taking stock of past conservation and seed sourcing initiatives for planning detailed data collection
Today’s Objectives: work plan for activities 1.7 (conservation), 3.4 (current seed sourcing public/ private), 3.5 (community involvement barriers)
Hotel meeting room
08:30-08:40 Recap of day 1 Summarise progress “ David
08:40-09:10 Introduction to today’s theme: Taking stock of past conservation and seed sourcing initiatives for planning detailed data collection
Introduce topics & types of data: documents/literature, household survey, interviews, focus groups
“
Riina
09:10-10:30 Strengths & weaknesses of past conservation initiatives
Identify main strengths and weaknesses for planning detailed data collection. Develop list of information sources (documents, interviewees etc). Countries share and gain information from each other
“
Riina All-group work
10:30-11:00 Coffee break Refresh - interact “ All
11:00-11:30 Main strengths and weaknesses of past conservation initiatives: Reporting back
“ All
11:30-11:45 Seed and seedling supply chains for tree planting programmes
Introduce topic, approaches to analysis, frame the questions for our project
“
Riina
11:30-12:15 Seed and seedling supply chains for tree planting programmes: group work
Describe current seed supply chains (with % & $ estimates for channels) by country. Identify existing information & gaps. Process to evaluate past work/ household surveys (income from forest related activities)
“
All- group work
25
12:15-13:00 Seed and seedling supply chains for tree planting programmes: reporting back
Make observations on diversity, levels, & detail of information of supply chains. Identify differences in chains by programmes/countries/actors (community/public/private) & community roles/entry points. Identify needs for detailed analysis & who will collect baseline data
“
All Riina
13:00-14:00 Lunch Refuel and refresh All
14:00-14:15 Barriers to community involvement in seed production: introduction
Gain broad view of strengths/ weaknesses, covering current seed collection practices, market linkages, community-level institutions, capacities
Hotel Meeting room
Riina
14.15-15.00 Barriers to community involvement in seed production: group discussions
Develop plan to Identify barriers and existing good practices by sector/ country; develop list of information sources for detailed data collection
“
All-group work
15:00-15:30 Barriers to community involvement in seed production: reporting back
“ All Riina
15:30-16:00 Break Refresh – interact “ All
16:00-17:00 Project Management (steering committee), accounting & reporting procedures and timelines according to Darwin requirements
Agree composition and meeting procedure for steering committee Ensure timely submission of reports /accounts to Darwin requirements
“
David/All
Wed. 12 Sept Provenance trials, propagation and communication Hotel meeting
room
08:30-09:45 Recap day 2 and complete associated work plan process
Finalise work plan for activities 1.7 (conservation), 3.4 (current seed sourcing-public/private), 3.5 (barriers to community involvement)
“
Riina
26
09:45-10:30 Capacity building Identify most important needs, whose capacities, type of training (format), needed to help project, student options
“ Riina All
10:30-11:00 Coffee break Refresh – interact “ All
11:00-11:30 Provenance trials: introduction and discussion Cover past initiatives, problems with trials. Understand partners interests
“ David All
11:30-13:00 Provenance trials: seed collection
Agree sampling strategy for seed collections. Explore options for exchange among partners (incl. genetic studies, institutional arrangements, timing, MTA)
“
All-group
13:00-14:00 Lunch Refuel and refresh “ All
14:00-14:45 Data sharing, database management and updating Ensure continuity & confidentiality where relevant (FPIC in communities) – activity 1.1
David Riina All
14:45-15:30 Propagation research in Cambodia: past and proposed – presentation and discussion (incl. other countries experiences)
Understand programme for developing vegetative propagation technique
“ So Thea All
15:30-16:00 Break Refresh – interact “ All
16:00-17:00 Project communication strategy Decide on means to communicate/ promote project news/information
“ David All
Thur. 13 Sept Field visit to Dalbergia planting sites Learn about FRC, see Dalbergia work, exchange experiences with FRC staff
Forest Research Center
NAFRI All
08:30 – 10:00 Travel to Forest Research Center (FRC) 49 km to north of Vientiane, 1.5-2 hours by bus/car
VTN-FRC
10:00 - 10:20 Brief introduction to FRC FRC meeting
room
10:20 - 10:45 Tree planting ceremony (1 sapling per participant) FRC Planting site All
10:45 - 11:10 Visit propagation area Nursery
11:10 - 11:30 Visit seed storage and qualification testing room Tree seed
testing unit
11:30 - 12:00 Visit herbarium Herbarium
12:00 – 13:00 Lunch Refuel and interact Understorey D. cochinchinensis
27
13:00 – 14:00 Visit D. cochinchinensis germplasm collection to discuss experience/importance of local participation in forest management. Measure dbh of trees
Germplasm collection. D. cochinchinensis plot
14:00 – 15:30 Visit germplasm collection of D. cochinchinensis and Dalbergia species (ex-situ site)
Candidate site for Bot. garden development
15:30 – 15:45 Wrap up
15:45 Return to Vientiane
Fri. 14 Sept Stakeholder engagement and scaling up and out Hotel large
meeting room
09:00 – 11:00 Outreach Workshop - DG NAFRI Chair Project personnel, Lao stakeholder organizations NAFRI present project activities in Lao PDR
Inform wider audience about project and provide forum for stakeholder input – incl. discussion of scaling out project impact/ involvement
Hotel large meeting room
All +orgs e.g. Recoft, CIAT
11:00-11:30 Coffee Interact All
11:30-13:00 Project members only - discuss feedback wrt the morning stakeholder session within Lao and across project region. Any other business – close of workshop
Understand stakeholder differences by country Modify communication strategy
Hotel large meeting room
David All
13:00 – 14:00 Lunch Refuel and refresh
14:00 – 17:00 Vientiane tour - all participants check out from hotel in morning
Thatluang, Patouxay, Horphakeo, etc
depends on workshop progress
18:00 – 21:00 Departure of participants (also 15th Sept am)
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Annex 2: List of Participants
Dr Suchitra Changtragoon
Forest and Plant Conservation Research
Office, Department National Wildlife & Plant
Conservation, Thailand
Mr Voradol Chamchumroon
Forest and Plant Conservation Research
Office, Department National Wildlife & Plant
Conservation, Thailand
Dr Thea So
Institute of Forest & Wildlife Research
Development of the Forestry Administration,
Cambodia
Mr Syneath Sreng
Institute of Forest & Wildlife Research
Development of the Forestry Administration,
Cambodia
Dr Tran Ti Hoa
Forest Genetics & Conservation Dept, Center
for Biodiversity & Biosafety (CBB), Institute of
Agricultural Genetics (AGI), Vietnam Academy
of Agricultural Sciences (VAAS)
Ms Tran Ti Dung
Forest Genetics & Conservation Dept, Center
for Biodiversity & Biosafety (CBB), Institute of
Agricultural Genetics (AGI), Vietnam Academy
of Agricultural Sciences (VAAS)
Mr Bansa Thammavong
Forest Science Research Center, National
Agriculture & Forestry Research Inst., Lao PDR
Mr Chaloun Bounithiphon
Forest Science Research Center, National
Agriculture & Forestry Research Inst., Lao PDR
Mr Vongvilay Vongkhamsao
Forest Science Research Center, National
Agriculture & Forestry Research Inst., Lao PDR
Dr Zheng Yongqi
Chinese Academy of Forestry
Dr David Boshier
University of Oxford
Dr Riina Jalonen
Bioversity International – Malaysia
Ms Tania Kanchanarak
Bioversity International – Malaysia
Mr Hannes Gaisberger
Bioversity International – Rome
Dr Ida Hartvig
University of Copenhagen
Mr Tin Hang Hung
University of Oxford
29
Annex 3: Media coverage in Lao PDR
A report of the workshop was published in Vientiane times on 12 September 2018.
30
Annex 4: Workshop evaluation
Conserving Rosewood genetic diversity for resilient livelihoods in the Mekong
Inception Workshop, Vansana Riverside Hotel, Vientiane, Laos, 10-14 September 2018
Workshop evaluation
This is a summary of the evaluation survey that was distributed at the end of the
workshop. Eleven participants responded to it. Figure 1 shows the results of the
close-ended questions. The workshop met well the expectations of 55% of the
participants and exceeded the expectations of 36% of them.
All of the participants (100%) rated their overall experience as being either good
or excellent.
Figure 1: Participants’ opinions about the inception workshop (close- ended questions, 11 respondents)
9%
55%
36%
How did the workshop meet your
expectations?
not at all met partially met well exceeded
27%
73%
How did the logistics work?
poorly moderately well well excellently
55%45%
How would you rate your overall
experience about the workshop?
poor moderate good excellent
31
What participants said they liked the most:
The most appreciated aspect of the workshop was the opportunity it created for partners to meet each
other and share experiences. It was also seen as an opportunity for them to learn in detail the activities
that will be developed during the project. The field trip was also highlighted.
• Meeting and sharing experiences with partners (5)
• Details and explanation of the project’s activities and methodology (3)
• Seedling collection information, and other related contents (1)
• Group work and the collaborative spirit (1)
• The exercises proposed (2)
• Field trip (2)
• Location, hotel, food (1)
No response: 1
What participants said they liked the least:
The meeting room, bad WIFI connection at the hotel, and the breakfast were the least appreciated
aspects of the workshop.
• Location, hotel, food (3)
• Individual discussions (1)
• Financial management (1)
• Relevance of the content (1)
• Not having enough time to discuss project management’s issues such as agreement and
invoicing (1)
No response: 4
What participants said about the time allocation:
Could have spent less time on:
• Individual discussions (1)
• Worksheet (1)
• Time to complete tasks (1)
No response: 8
Could have spent more time on:
• Discussions (4)
• Group work (1)
• Improving the relationship between partners (1)
• Planning future work in more detail, e.g. seed collection (1)
• Detailed explanation /discussion on each activity (1)
• Discussion about methodology and monitoring (1)
• The topic of conservation (1)
No response: 3
32
Participants comments, ideas or suggestions for improvement:
Below are listed the comments, ideas and suggestions made by participants. However, the majority of
the people left this part of the survey blank.
• Find a way for everyone to participate more actively. Participants have many insight and
knowledge but often too shy to share.
• Should spend more time for explain field report and finance report of project.
• Site visit should focus on natural forest...
• Should have participants for full workshop time, e.g. avoid to miss the workshop query.